1B Ty France
As one of the key acquisitions by the Jays at the trade deadline, Ty France made a strong first impression with the club, especially during the time when star first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. was out with an injury.
However, as Toronto had more and more bodies returning to full health, France has seen his playing time cut back substantially in recent weeks. In doing so, his offense has suffered as well, having gone just 2-for-23 with zero runs scored, home runs and RBIs in his last 11 games.
Now currently finding himself on the IL with an oblique inflammation, the chances of France securing a postseason roster spot has become more bleak than ever before.
2B/OF Davis Schneider
Since having his unbelievable debut with the Jays back in 2023, Davis Schneider had struggled for the most part this past season along with the early parts of 2025, leading to his eventual demotion to the minors. Nevertheless, Schneider became a player of relevance once again when he returned to the big league club in early June.
From a feeble .111 batting average and .471 OPS, he was able to raise it all the way to .252 and .858 respectively by the end of August, to go along with 25 runs scored, 10 home runs and 28 RBIs in 54 total games played in the process.
However, the 26-year-old young talent has had a sluggish September to date despite getting some regular playing time, compiling just a .179 batting average, .569 OPS, along with just four runs scored, one home run and two RBIs in 16 games of action.
There’s no question Schneider provides the greatest power potential coming off the bench for the Jays. So if they value that over defense come the playoffs, his roster spot in the postseason will be waiting for him.
P Mason Fluharty
As one of the Jays’ surprising performers earlier on in the 2025 season, reliever Mason Fluharty eventually lost some of that mojo by June, leading to his eventual demotion back to the minors by early July.
He would later return to the majors in late July and would go on to make one of his most memorable relief appearance of his career against the Los Angeles Dodgers on August 10 for his first career save. On the season, Fluharty has amassed a 4-2 record with a 4.74 ERA, 1.22 WHIP, along with a worrisome 11.7% walk rate but solid 24.4% strikeout rate in 53 relief appearances.
With other Jays lefty relievers struggling down the stretch, Fluharty could potentially sneak his way onto the postseason roster as a lefty specialist, given he has held left-handed batters to just a .198 average on the year.
